You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will automatically be added to our player registry (unless you opt not to) and will be able to privately find and communicate with other players in your area. You will also be able to post and reply to topics, vote in polls, and many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

Midgard Bestiary for 4th edition D&D Now Available

In the passage ahead you see a golem made of eyes, holding a screaming psychic derro fetus in a cage. Roll for initiative!
As we draw near to the big release of the Midgard Campaign Setting*worldbook, we’ve hit the bestiary trifecta: our latest product brings the wonder and terror (mostly terror) of Midgard to 4th Edition D&D. Midgard Bestiary: 4th Edition Dungeons & Dragons Editionby Richard Green and Brian Liberge is out today!
The book features over 150 monsters to challenge player characters in your game, whether set in Midgard or your home campaign world.*Each entry includes useful background information to help you use the creatures and give you a glimpse into the rich and storied world of Midgard – and it’s introduced by 4e lead designer Rob Heinsoo, whose essay offers a system for Dungeon Masters to turn monster content into something players can use while creating characters. The creatures included cover all levels from 1 through 33, allowing you to use this Bestiary throughout your entire campaign.

Nearly all the creatures from the AGE Bestiary appear in the book, as well as 100 others carefully selected from throughout Open Design’s history. You’ll find older monsters like the owl harpy from Six Arabian Nights and the blood hag from Blood of the Gorgon rubbing shoulders with more recent creatures such as the sand giant from Lost City and the putrid haunt, as well as brand new creatures written by Midgard patrons. And no Midgard Bestiary would be complete without plenty of kobolds, ghouls, clockwork creatures, and shadow fey!
Monsters from 3.5, Pathfinder, and AGE have been converted to 4th Edition, and in many cases, the authors have provided additional variants to help DMs build exciting encounters featuring groups of the same creature type. Creatures from earlier 4th Edition products—such as Wrath of the River King and the Imperial Gazetteer—have been updated: damage levels, defenses, and stat block formats have all been reviewed and revised where necessary, with particular emphasis on solos and elites.
Pick up*Midgard Bestiary: 4th Edition Dungeons & Dragons Edition at the Kobold Store. As a sneak preview, here is one of the weirdest, most horrifying monsters you’re likely to encounter in the lightless tunnels beneath Midgard’s surface:DERRO FETAL SAVANTThis creature appears to be a blue-skinned infant no older than a year. Its limbs flail, its head lolls with an obvious lack of coordination, and it screams incessantly.
The derro are a malevolent race of dwarf-like creatures forced deep underground centuries ago. They found a dark home—and equally dark gods to worship in the subterranean realms beneath the Ironcrags. Here they nursed their hatreds and perfected the use of magics only whispered of in the sunlight.Spreading Insanity
Of the madness that resonates so strongly in derro society, perhaps nothing is so twisted as fetal savants. These tiny, premature infants are born insane and destined to lead their people further into madness. Only the most rare of derro are born with the rapidly fading ability to exchange souls with other creatures, and when discovered, the babbling infants are treated with bizarre and grotesque reverence. Placed in small, intricately wrought, pillowed cages and borne aloft on hooked golden staves, the wild- eyed newborns are carried standard-like behind battle lines to sow madness and confusion among enemy ranks.Crazed Possessors

Fetal savants use their despairing prison of flesh ability to randomly seize control of an appropriate victim among combatants. While possessing a host body, the savant attacks opponents wildly, relishing